• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"positions "

Book 24. (1 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Individual Quote)

I signaled to Plenius that his fellows might take up positions in the brush, on either side of the likely path of the runner. - (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter 32, Sentence #161)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
32 161 I signaled to Plenius that his fellows might take up positions in the brush, on either side of the likely path of the runner.

Book 24. (7 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
32 158 They were then, I gathered, not likely, any of them, really, to be Cosians or mercenaries.
32 159 I considered the likely path of the fugitive, given the lay of the land, the simplest geodesics he might traverse, giving him the least resistance to flight.
32 160 I could hear him splashing through some shallow water now, several yards away.
32 161 I signaled to Plenius that his fellows might take up positions in the brush, on either side of the likely path of the runner.
32 162 Plenius, close to me now, half bent over in the brush, grasped his spear in two hands, for the forward thrust.
32 163 Given the swiftness of the runner and the strength of Plenius, who was a large, strong man, and who had come up through the ranks as a spearman, that thrust, compounding the forces involved, would presumably carry both the head and upper part of the shaft through the runner's body.
32 164 I put my hand on the spear and pushed it down.
They were then, I gathered, not likely, any of them, really, to be Cosians or mercenaries. I considered the likely path of the fugitive, given the lay of the land, the simplest geodesics he might traverse, giving him the least resistance to flight. I could hear him splashing through some shallow water now, several yards away. I signaled to Plenius that his fellows might take up positions in the brush, on either side of the likely path of the runner. Plenius, close to me now, half bent over in the brush, grasped his spear in two hands, for the forward thrust. Given the swiftness of the runner and the strength of Plenius, who was a large, strong man, and who had come up through the ranks as a spearman, that thrust, compounding the forces involved, would presumably carry both the head and upper part of the shaft through the runner's body. I put my hand on the spear and pushed it down. - (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter 32)